Participatory development of collective rules for natural resource and land management. Lasting effects from the local to the national level

Auteurs

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.19182/agritrop/00026

Mots-clés


land use planning, natural resources, land policies, governance, social participation, environmental management, citizen participation

Résumé

Version française de l'article

Versão portuguesa do artigo

Although participatory approaches are increasingly recognised as necessary for involving local people in resource and land management, their impacts often remain limited in the long term, whether at the local level or on broader scales. Based on this observation, a CIRAD team developed a methodology, Self Land Policies, whose effects at the local and national levels can still be seen 15 years after its implementation in Senegal. Applied to the management of local territories, then beyond, to the definition of national land and environmental regulations, this methodology has launched collective dynamics driven by the stakeholders themselves, who implement them according to their own requirements.

Biographie de l'auteur

Patrick d'Aquino

Patrick D’Aquino is a geographer in the GREEN research unit (Management of Renewable Resources and Environment, https://ur-green.cirad.fr/en). Working for better integration of stakeholders’ viewpoints in territorial management tools (maps, GIS, simulations, etc.), he is one of the founders of the ComMod network (https://www.commod.org/en) and has since continued to improve participatory simulation methodologies. He is also an expert on land and the management of common resources in the Sahel and Southeast Asia.

Références

Author's publications

Bousquet F., Barreteau O., d’Aquino P., Étienne M., Boissau S., Aubert S., Le Page C., Babin D., Castella J.-C. 2002. Multi-agent systems and role games: Collective learning processes for ecosystem management. In: Janssen Marco A. (ed.). Complexity and ecosystem management: The theory and practice of multi-agent systems. Cheltenham, Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 249-285. ISBN 1843760614.

d’Aquino P., Papazian H., 2014. An Inclusionary Strategy Reaching Empowering Outcomes Ten Years after a Two-Year Participatory Land Uses management. Environmental Management and Sustainable Development 3 (2): 154-181. https://doi.org/10.5296/emsd.v3i2.6595

d’Aquino P., Bah A., 2014. Multi-level participatory design of land use policies in African drylands: a method to embed adaptability skills of drylands societies in a policy framework. Journal of Environmental Management 132: 207-219. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2013.11.011

d'Aquino P., 2009. La participation comme élément d’une stratégie globale d’intervention : l’approche « gestion autonome progressive ». Cahiers Agricultures 18 (5) : 433-440. https://doi.org/10.1684/agr.2009.0330

Short film

Defalt Q., 2014. Du terroir au pouvoir. Short film, 26 minutes. Comité foncier technique et développement, Paris, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Development (MAEDI), Agence française de développement (AFD), Paris. https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x28rttd

Other references

Étienne M. (coord.), 2010. La modélisation d'accompagnement. Versailles, Editions Quae, 384 p. E-book downloadable free of charge at https://www.quae-open.com/produit/15/9782759213894/la-modelisation-d-accompagnement

Touré O., Seck S.M., 2013. Amélioration de la gouvernance foncière au Sénégal. Fiche Pays, 3, Comité technique Foncier et Développement, 29 p. http://www.foncier-developpement.fr/publication/amelioration-de-la-gouvernance-fonciere-au-senegal-enjeux-actuels-et-defis-pour-lavenir/

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Publié

2015-01-01

Comment citer

d’Aquino, P. (2015). Participatory development of collective rules for natural resource and land management. Lasting effects from the local to the national level. Perspective, (33), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.19182/agritrop/00026

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Rubrique

Anglais